Drought and Water Deficit

Overview

Drought is one of the most limiting factors for global crop productivity. Phenotyping under controlled or semi-controlled moisture regimes enables quantification of plant responses and identification of drought-tolerant genotypes.

1. Screening breeding populations in controlled drought cycles

2. Evaluating recovery after re-watering

3. Quantifying genotype × environment interactions for water deficit

4. Studying root–shoot coordination under stress

5. Developing indices for drought tolerance ranking

Recommended Solutions

High-Throughput Phenotyping System

  • Automated monitoring of wilting, leaf rolling, and canopy reduction under drought
  • Time-series imaging to track drought-induced growth dynamics
  • Quantification of biomass, leaf area, and water-use-efficiency indicators

Gantry-Based Phenotyping Platform

  • Large-scale phenotyping under controlled or semi-field drought conditions
  • Multi-angle or 3D imaging for assessing plant architecture under water stress
  • Spatially consistent data supporting genotype × environment studies

Root Phenotyping System

  • Quantification of root growth, branching, and density under drought
  • Evaluation of root–shoot allocation and water acquisition strategies
  • Integrated analysis of below- and above-ground drought traits

Why Our System Fits This Application

Precise control and reproducibility of water deficit treatments
Time-series imaging for dynamic monitoring of growth and morphology
High-throughput screening of large genotype populations
Integration of root and shoot traits for holistic assessment
Automated, objective, and standardized measurements
Targeted evaluation of reproductive traits and seed yield under drought

Research References

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